A friend used to tell a story of how he and his best friend were
sitting in a train station in Germany talking explicitly about the nature
of their struggles and temptations, taking for granted that no one would
bother to listen, let alone translate their English. A few moments later,
an English speaking man leaned over from two seats away and indicated that
he recognized my friend. My friend says that at that moment he didn’t want
to be who he was.

Lent seems to be a time when scripture and the Church call us to
look closely at ourselves, even to seek out our darkness and our shortcomings.
Today’s readings bring me face to face with the darkness of my temptations.
Like my friend, confronting the exact nature of my temptations makes me
want to deny a part of myself- the part that is sinful and always on the
verge of falling. I’m painfully aware that others would be horrified by
my struggles and temptations. But, my faith must be grounded, not in others’
opinions and judgements, but in the knowledge that God and his love are
greater than whatever sin any of us commit.

As painful as facing the reality of my temptations is, facing them
makes sense to me in light of Christ. I would rather live on the verge
of falling and have my security be in the all sufficient grace of God than
to live in some kind of dangerous illusion that I am insulated from temptation,
or that others’ opinions of me are more important than leaning on God’s
grace.

I don’t have many first hand experiences of hitchhiking, but it is
the image that my mind conjures up as I reflect on these readings. It is
the experience of standing on the side of the road with your thumb out
and hundreds of cars go by. Then, one car stops and suddenly you forget
that you’ve been standing there for an hour. One act of mercy on the part
of one person erases the fact that hundreds drove by and were completely
apathetic. One act of grace is a very profound thing. The world may be
very cruel in many ways, but that one act of grace on the part of Christ
changes everything.

So, Lent is a time to seek out our darkness, but not in order to
condemn ourselves, but in order to seek the light of Christ and “receive
the abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness…” As Thomas Merton
said, “Lent is then not a season of punishment so much as one of healing.”
And suddenly we realize, in that light, that we are not at all on the verge
of falling, but on the verge of the miracle of God’s grace.